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query: is there a concrete example of HTTP signature validation that this one can test its code against?

details: this would specify the [signature, public key, string that is signed], and the steps to verify (for example, openssl commands).

context: its ActivityPub implementation considers all incoming activities to be incorrectly signed.

idle historical musings, cryptocurrency 

@serapath Anywhere within SEPA, bank transfers are typically free, including internationally; and stuff like Wise is also very low-cost and, crucially, much simpler and faster to use than cryptocurrencies.

Like, that's the whole thing with cryptocurrencies and so many things like it that are hyped - sure, they do something that could be useful, but they don't actually do it *better* than the things that already exist.

(Also, I'm extremely not a fan of trying to 'monetize' social interactions. It creates toxic dynamics. I'd consider that an anti-feature.)

idle historical musings, cryptocurrency 

@serapath Oh, sure, but "Bitcoiners" is a very very very small group, and that group alone would have never caused Bitcoin to catch on.

The mass "adoption" of Bitcoin happened in roughly two stages; first, a bunch of actual shops and companies accepting it as a payment method, while it was being marketed as a fast and low-fees money transfer method, and then a ton of 'traders' (ie. capitalists, including commercial miners) trying to extract profit from it.

The traders then went on to spawn a lot of other cryptocurrencies, with a fig leaf of functionality that never actually became reality, because they fundamentally didn't offer much over Bitcoin anyway.

It's that first group that I'm thinking of here - in the US the existing payment infrastructure is generally nightmarish, both for consumers and vendors, and this functioned as a selling point for that group to adopt Bitcoin. Which then made it interesting to traders, which eventually sustained the hype themselves.

Had that first group not been there, the second group likely also would not have been, and it would likely have forever remained a weird nerd thing.

@hvangalen I mean, I don't actually have a *problem* with media being made that way, just... as long as it's not all of it, and it should really be labelled as such!

telegram 

Can't help but notice that the reason for the Telegram CEO being arrested in France seems to have shifted from "failure to moderate the platform" (in the original reporting) to "failure to hand over user identities to cops" (Telegram updated their T&C to hand over data).

Those are two VERY different things.

idle historical musings, cryptocurrency 

@serapath (Also, "unbanked" is a bit of a misnomer because these metrics often include people who *do* have access to eg. mobile payment systems that functionally act as a bank for them, but just aren't recognized as such by eg. the ECB or Federal Reserve)

idle historical musings, cryptocurrency 

@serapath My question is very specifically about it 'catching on', though. Sure, it would have probably *existed*, but the early broad adoption was primarily driven by frustrations with the US banking system, and the then-promises of lower transaction fees.

I'm not sure it would have ever reached that point of mass interest if it weren't for the terrible banking structures in the US inviting people to look for alternatives. Only very few people ever cared about the *philosophical* underpinnings really.

“Sometimes they say it’s illegal [for prisoners to unionize], but it’s not. It’s just frowned upon. But it works.”

New today from Michelle Pitcher: Texans are organizing inside and outside of prisons to empower incarcerated workers, who labor in dangerous conditions without pay. texasobserver.org/solidarity-p

#politics #prison #WorkersRights #labor #HumanRights #Texas #USpol #news

re: some thoughts on fedi more generally 

@cy @Ember I feel like you're making a lot of assumptions here that aren't quite right. What I'm talking about is cohesive communities; interactions don't center *around* individuals, but that doesn't mean that people are not known on a personal level within a community (like how communities have worked for thousands of years already).

idle historical musings, cryptocurrency 

If the US had had something like SEPA (and the associated infrastructure), I genuinely wonder if Bitcoin would have ever caught on in the first place

If you're not quite sure of the details of a situation *and you realize that*, then like, don't loudly comment on it either? This is not difficult?

some thoughts on fedi more generally, concise 

@internetsdairy I think that's sort of the case, and especially at first this would have seemed alluring and felt powerful, but I feel that by this point the downsides of that are understood widely enough that it's probably not as strong of a selling point as it used to be.

Lots of people talk about 'social media detox' now and that suggests that people now have a more well-rounded understanding of the tradeoffs of this model, than they used to.

@rune @nthia In the context of NL, I was referring to the thing where in a conflict between two road users, the 'stronger' road user (car > bike > pedestrian) is automatically assumed to be at fault unless there's clear evidence otherwise.

Don't know if that's what @Tak was also referring to :)

you don't have to give your opinion on every bit of media that comes up in conversation, especially if your opinion is negative and *especially* if everyone else seems to like it. I'd much rather hear about things you enjoy.

@AmyPetty @freakazoid (The latter appears credible to people because something that looks a lot like it *does* seem to be true; which is that a *lack of accountability* breeds abuse. But that isn't the same thing unless you make it so!)

@AmyPetty @freakazoid I think a lot of folks don't realize just how much especially Facebook has affected the way that we all see social media today.

Despite not being the first of its kind, they almost single-handedly redefined what "social media" means; not just that, they were also the origin of the mass belief that requiring "real names" reduces abuse (and, conversely, that anonymity breeds abuse).

They were not the first to *make* this claim (notably, at least a webcomic beat them to that), but they certainly were the ones who popularized the belief, and who the modern beliefs around this topic can all be traced back to.

And yet most people think of this as "something that everyone knows and has always been true". Even though it's false, and is a very recent mass belief.

concept: a sexy anthropomorphic iron encourages you and your fellow laborers to take coordinated action to secure a collective bargaining agreement, because you should strike while the iron is hot

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